Book Image

Kotlin Programming Cookbook

By : Aanand Shekhar Roy, Rashi Karanpuria
Book Image

Kotlin Programming Cookbook

By: Aanand Shekhar Roy, Rashi Karanpuria

Overview of this book

The Android team has announced first-class support for Kotlin 1.1. This acts as an added boost to the language and more and more developers are now looking at Kotlin for their application development. This recipe-based book will be your guide to learning the Kotlin programming language. The recipes in this book build from simple language concepts to more complex applications of the language. After the fundamentals of the language, you will learn how to apply the object-oriented programming features of Kotlin 1.1. Programming with Lambdas will show you how to use the functional power of Kotlin. This book has recipes that will get you started with Android programming with Kotlin 1.1, providing quick solutions to common problems encountered during Android app development. You will also be taken through recipes that will teach you microservice and concurrent programming with Kotlin. Going forward, you will learn to test and secure your applications with Kotlin. Finally, this book supplies recipes that will help you migrate your Java code to Kotlin and will help ensure that it's interoperable with Java.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Sending a text intent using Anko


Anko provides a wrapper around the intent actions, which makes calling actions super easy. One of those actions is sending an SMS. In this recipe, we will see how to launch an intent that sends messages to a telephone number.

Getting ready

I'll be using Android Studio for coding purposes. You need to include Anko library in your build.gradle file. Just add the given lines and you are good to go:

compile "org.jetbrains.anko:anko-commons:$anko_version"

You can also clone the gitlab.com/aanandshekharroy/Anko-examples repository and switch to the 3-intent-actions branch to get the source code.

How to do it…

Let's follow these steps to send an SMS using intents:

  1. Anko provides the sendSMS method, which takes in two parameters—one of them is the phone number, and the other is the message:
sendSMS("+9195XXXXXX","Hi")
  1. Calling this method will launch the messaging app, or will ask you which messaging app to launch if you have more than one type of that app and will prefill...